The Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group works to help people whose rights have been violated and investigates cases involving such abuse, as well as assessing the overall human rights situation in Ukraine. The Group also seeks to develop awareness of human rights issues through public events and its various publications

Poland's Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that authorities in Belarus did receive banking information about activist Ales Bialiatski i from the Polish Prosecutor-General's Office.

Martin Basacki, the Polish Foreign Ministry's press spokesman, told RFE/RL's Belarus Service that "it was not Poland, but the prosecutor-general" who gave the banking information to Belarus.

Basacki made clear that the prosecutor's office did so despite having been advised not to cooperate with Belarusian authorities concerning the investigation of Bialiatski, the head of the Belarus Vyasna rights organization.

"I'd like to add that shortly after December 19 and the beginning of the extraordinarily severe wave of repression in Belarus, " Basacki said, "the [Polish] Ministry of Foreign Affairs briefed all Polish government organs, as well as the Prosecutor-General's Office, specifically to prevent such things from happening. We warned that the Belarusian regime might make such efforts.

"Unfortunately, these warnings had no affect on one institution, meaning the Prosecutor-General's Office. Why not? That's a question for the prosecutor-general."

Bialiatski was arrested on tax evasion charges after Lithuania provided banking information about the rights activist to Belarusian authorities.

Lithuanian Ambassador to Belarus Edminas Bagdonas wrote to Bialiatski i's wife, Natalia Pinchuk, on August 10 and apologized for the lapse that led to her husband's arrest.

Polish officials at first denied Belarus had obtained any information on Bialiatski i from Poland.